Author Topic: recovering files with Phoenix liveCD  (Read 500 times)

Offline dtvarnum

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recovering files with Phoenix liveCD
« on: January 08, 2011, 07:19:47 PM »
This morning my wife's Acer Aspire PC with PCLinux 2010 on it stopped booting. At 8am it was fine. At 10am it would not boot up and had a black screen as though it was trying to boot up in the monitor mode. No xscreen or graphic just console text. Well I went to several computer shops and as many of you may no, the average "computer expert" has not clue about Linux. The Geek Squad was kinda useful though. They hooked the laptop hard drive to a machine they had and said the machine couldn't see the hard drive.

So with little hope of retrieving my wife's book she was preparing to take to a publisher (yeah I always told her to backup to internet or flash or something). I went back online to PCLos sight and downloaded another iso (Phoenixxfc). I am hoping that by booting from the liveCD that I can reach, find, copy  the files on the hard drive.

Does anyone know where the "desktop" files are located? That's where the 4 odt files are that she needs. Any help is appreciated. I have a loaded Phoenix and am looking around to see if I can find the files. The previous version is still on the hard drive. It just will not boot.

Offline T6

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Re: recovering files with Phoenix liveCD
« Reply #1 on: January 08, 2011, 08:23:46 PM »
that depends on how did you installed

if you created a /home partition search for it, the files should be in /thenameofyouruser/desktop

the desktop is assuming you are using kde4, if you use another desktop search with enable hidden files

if you only had a / partition the files should be on /home/thenamefoyouruser/desktop

if you want a full backup just find the /thenameofyouruser folder and copy it completely

the rest of archives can be dumped, sometimes something useful could be in /tmp but tmp is a temporary folder and if you know what you want forget this one
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Online Old-Polack

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Re: recovering files with Phoenix liveCD
« Reply #2 on: January 08, 2011, 10:20:31 PM »
This morning my wife's Acer Aspire PC with PCLinux 2010 on it stopped booting. At 8am it was fine. At 10am it would not boot up and had a black screen as though it was trying to boot up in the monitor mode. No xscreen or graphic just console text. Well I went to several computer shops and as many of you may no, the average "computer expert" has not clue about Linux. The Geek Squad was kinda useful though. They hooked the laptop hard drive to a machine they had and said the machine couldn't see the hard drive.

So with little hope of retrieving my wife's book she was preparing to take to a publisher (yeah I always told her to backup to internet or flash or something). I went back online to PCLos sight and downloaded another iso (Phoenixxfc). I am hoping that by booting from the liveCD that I can reach, find, copy  the files on the hard drive.

Does anyone know where the "desktop" files are located? That's where the 4 odt files are that she needs. Any help is appreciated. I have a loaded Phoenix and am looking around to see if I can find the files. The previous version is still on the hard drive. It just will not boot.

First rule of troubleshooting, don't panic, and do something foolish. If you got to a login prompt, your system is fully booted, it's just the X server that hasn't started. You can try logging in as your normal user, then issue the command startx. If that was going to work it probably would have already, so expect an error message. Posting that message will give us clues as to the problem source.

Better yet, log in as root, then enter the command pcc. This will give a ncurses version of the PCC application you use in the GUI to configure your OS. Using the arrow keys, Tab key, spacebar and the Enter key, to navigate, select, and execute your choices, you can re-configure your systems display. First choose the correct monitor, then the correct graphics card. (usually the default choice) Choose the resolution you want. If you are offered a proprietary driver, that's usually the best choice, but it could also be that a newer proprietary driver is the cause of the problem in the first place. All you can do is try. Run the offered test. If you see vertical colored stripes and a message window you can read, asking if you want to keep this configuration, answer yes, then leave the pcc application. Reboot to see if the problem is now solved.

If that doesn't work, come back and post your results, so we can try something a bit different. If we can't get the system to boot to the GUI login, then start worrying about file recovery, and re-installing. Usually that is not needed.
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